Mob of the Mean: Free beanie, cattle-prod and Charley Fan Club! "Doctor X is just treating you the way he treats everyone--as subhuman crap too dumb to breathe in after you breathe out."--DonDocX: FTW.--sparks
"Doctor X wins again."--Pyrrho
"Never sorry to make a racist Fucktard cry."--His Humble MagNIfIcence
"It was the criticisms of Doc X, actually, that let me see more clearly how far the hypocrisy had gone."--clarsct
"I'd leave it up to Doctor X who has been a benevolent tyrant so far."--Grammatron
"Indeed you are a river to your people.
Shit. That's going to end up in your sig."--Pyrrho
"Try a twelve step program and accept Doctor X as your High Power."--asthmatic camel
"just like Doc X said." --gnomeWS CHAMPIONS X3!!! NBA CHAMPIONS!!Stanley Cup!SB CHAMPIONS X5!!!!!35

Anaxagoras wrote:You might as well write a song about two pimples falling in love with each other.

Don't give them ideas. They would do it. You know they would.

Disney is responsible for Inside Out. A movie where a teen girl's anthropomorphic "joy" intentionally created 99999 imaginary boyfriends who "would die for her" and talked them into doing just that by stacking themselves up and falling into a chasm so that her anthropomorphic "joy" could rescue her anthropomorphic "sadness". Neither one shed a tear, or so much as blinked, as all those imaginary boyfriends fell to their deaths.

You think they would hesitate to make anthropomorphic zits having a romantic interlude? They're probably working on it right now. A pimple could be the next Disney princess.

The United States Geological Survey (USGS) shared the picture on “Throwback Thursday” last week to highlight a “rare” lava-dome fountain that was spotted in Hawaii on Oct. 11, 1969.

“Dome fountain of episode 10, October 10–13, 1969, eruption of Kilauea Volcano,” USGS tweeted. “Symmetrical dome fountains such as this are rare.”

Lava domes — or volcanic domes — vary in size and shape. They can reach up to 1,640 feet high, but typically stay within ranges of 30 to 320 feet, according to the USGS.

They’re also pretty common. They’re formed by viscous (gooey) magma that piles up around the opening of the volvano, also known as the “vent,” according to research compiled by Oregon State.

“Like lava flows, they typically do not have enough gas or pressure to erupt explosively, although they may sometimes be preceded or followed by explosive activity,” Oregon State explained in a blog post. “However, unlike lava flows, the lava that forms domes is often [too] thick and sticky to flow very far, and thus instead pile up thick and high around the vent.”